2,646 research outputs found
Quantum nature of black holes
I reconsider Hawking's analysis of the effects of gravitational collapse on
quantum fields, taking into account interactions between the fields. The
ultra-high energy vacuum fluctuations, which had been considered to be an
awkward peripheral feature of the analysis, are shown to play a key role. By
interactions, they can scatter particles to, or create pairs of particle at,
ultra-high energies. The energies rapidly become so great that quantum gravity
must play a dominant role. Thus the vicinities of black holes are essentially
quantum-gravitational regimes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Honorable mention in the 2004 Gravity Research
Foundation Essay Competitio
In an expanding universe, what doesn't expand?
The expansion of the universe is often viewed as a uniform stretching of
space that would affect compact objects, atoms and stars, as well as the
separation of galaxies. One usually hears that bound systems do not take part
in the general expansion, but a much more subtle question is whether bound
systems expand partially. In this paper, a very definitive answer is given for
a very simple system: a classical "atom" bound by electrical attraction. With a
mathemical description appropriate for undergraduate physics majors, we show
that this bound system either completely follows the cosmological expansion, or
-- after initial transients -- completely ignores it. This "all or nothing"
behavior can be understood with techniques of junior-level mechanics. Lastly,
the simple description is shown to be a justifiable approximation of the
relativistically correct formulation of the problem.Comment: 8 pages, 9 eps figure
Towards a closed differential aging formula in special relativity
It is well known that the Lorentzian length of a timelike curve in Minkowski
spacetime is smaller than the Lorentzian length of the geodesic connecting its
initial and final endpoints. The difference is known as the 'differential
aging' and its calculation in terms of the proper acceleration history of the
timelike curve would provide an important tool for the autonomous spacetime
navigation of non-inertial observers. I give a solution in 3+1 dimensions which
holds whenever the acceleration is decomposed with respect to a lightlike
transported frame (lightlike transport will be defined), the analogous and more
natural problem for a Fermi-Walker decomposition being still open.Comment: Latex2e, 6 pages, 1 figure, uses psfrag. Contribution to the
Proceedings of The Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE 2006), Palma de Mallorca,
Spain September 4-8, 200
Tuning the stochastic background of gravitational waves using the WMAP data
The cosmological bound of the stochastic background of gravitational waves is
analyzed with the aid of the WMAP data, differently from lots of works in
literature, where the old COBE data were used. From our analysis, it will
result that the WMAP bounds on the energy spectrum and on the characteristic
amplitude of the stochastic background of gravitational waves are greater than
the COBE ones, but they are also far below frequencies of the earth-based
antennas band. At the end of this letter a lower bound for the integration time
of a potential detection with advanced LIGO is released and compared with the
previous one arising from the old COBE data. Even if the new lower bound is
minor than the previous one, it results very long, thus for a possible
detection we hope in the LISA interferometer and in a further growth in the
sensitivity of advanced projects.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, published in Modern Physics Letters A. arXiv
admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:0901.119
Quantum Perfect-Fluid Kaluza-Klein Cosmology
The perfect fluid cosmology in the 1+d+D dimensional Kaluza-Klein spacetimes
for an arbitrary barotropic equation of state is quantized by using
the Schutz's variational formalism. We make efforts in the mathematics to solve
the problems in two cases. For the first case of the stiff fluid we
exactly solve the Wheeler-DeWitt equation when the space is flat. After the
superposition of the solutions we analyze the Bohmian trajectories of the
final-stage wave-packet functions and show that the flat spaces and the
compact spaces will eventually evolve into finite scale functions. For the
second case of , we use the approximated wavefunction in the
Wheeler-DeWitt equation to find the analytic forms of the final-stage
wave-packet functions. After analyzing the Bohmian trajectories we show that
the flat spaces will be expanding forever while the scale function of the
contracting spaces would not become zero within finite time. Our
investigations indicate that the quantum effect in the quantum perfect-fluid
cosmology could prevent the extra compact spaces in the Kaluza-Klein theory
from collapsing into a singularity or that the "crack-of-doom" singularity of
the extra compact dimensions is made to occur at .Comment: Latex 18 pages, add section 2 to introduce the quantization of
perfect flui
Multi-step Fermi normal coordinates
We generalize the concept of Fermi normal coordinates adapted to a geodesic
to the case where the tangent space to the manifold at the base point is
decomposed into a direct product of an arbitrary number of subspaces, so that
we follow several geodesics in turn to find the point with given coordinates.
We compute the connection and the metric as integrals of the Riemann tensor. In
the case of one subspace (Riemann normal coordinates) or two subspaces, we
recover some results previously found by Nesterov, using somewhat different
techniques.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Regularization of the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a compact object
The equations for the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a
compact-object have highly singular source terms at the point particle limit.
At this limit the standard retarded solutions to these equations are
ill-defined. Here we construct well-defined and physically meaningful solutions
to these equations. These solutions are important for practical calculations:
the planned gravitational-wave detector LISA requires preparation of waveform
templates for the potential gravitational-waves. Construction of templates with
desired accuracy for extreme mass ratio binaries, in which a compact-object
inspirals towards a supermassive black-hole, requires calculation of the
second-order gravitational perturbations produced by the compact-object.Comment: 12 pages, discussion expanded, to be published in Phys. Rev. D Rapid
Communicatio
Averaged null energy condition violation in a conformally flat spacetime
We show that the averaged null energy condition can be violated by a
conformally coupled scalar field in a conformally flat spacetime in 3+1
dimensions. The violation is dependent on the quantum state and can be made as
large as desired. It does not arise from the presence of anomalies, although
anomalous violations are also possible. Since all geodesics in conformally flat
spacetimes are achronal, the achronal averaged null energy condition is
likewise violated.Comment: 11 page
Construction of the second-order gravitational perturbations produced by a compact object
Accurate calculation of the gradual inspiral motion in an extreme mass-ratio
binary system, in which a compact-object inspirals towards a supermassive
black-hole requires calculation of the interaction between the compact-object
and the gravitational perturbations that it induces. These metric perturbations
satisfy linear partial differential equations on a curved background spacetime
induced by the supermassive black-hole. At the point particle limit the
second-order perturbations equations have source terms that diverge as
, where is the distance from the particle. This singular behavior
renders the standard retarded solutions of these equations ill-defined. Here we
resolve this problem and construct well-defined and physically meaningful
solutions to these equations. We recently presented an outline of this
resolution [E. Rosenthal, Phys. Rev. D 72, 121503 (2005)]. Here we provide the
full details of this analysis. These second-order solutions are important for
practical calculations: the planned gravitational-wave detector LISA requires
preparation of waveform templates for the expected gravitational-waves.
Construction of templates with desired accuracy for extreme mass-ratio binaries
requires accurate calculation of the inspiral motion including the interaction
with the second-order gravitational perturbations.Comment: 30 page
Gravitational wave detectors based on matter wave interferometers (MIGO) are no better than laser interferometers (LIGO)
We show that a recent claim that matter wave interferometers have a much
higher sensitivity than laser interferometers for a comparable physical setup
is unfounded. We point out where the mistake in the earlier analysis is made.
We also disprove the claim that only a description based on the geodesic
deviation equation can produce the correct physical result. The equations for
the quantum dynamics of non-relativistic massive particles in a linearly
perturbed spacetime derived here are useful for treating a wider class of
related physical problems. A general discussion on the use of atom
interferometers for the detection of gravitational waves is also provided.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX4; minor changes, one figure and a few references
were added, an additional appendix was included where we explain why,
contrary to the claims in gr-qc/0409099, the effects due to the reflection
off the mirrors cancel out in the final result for the phase shif
- …